The value of an old wooden chicken coop would depend upon a number of factors. Some of these factors would include, what kind of wood and the condition of the coop.
To neutralize the smell of ammonia in a chicken coop, remove the damp and soiled bedding to be replaced with fresh bedding. Baking soda is safe to mix with the bedding or to sprinkle in the coop to freshen.
Chickens can safely eat fresh bay leaves. You can toss some into the chicken coop with them to see if the chickens want to eat them. It is not a good idea to put them with the chicken's food.
If you put mothballs just outside the coop the snakes will keep away. If you are worried about to snake eating the hens eggs you can put old golf balls in some of the laying boxes and the snake will mistake them for eggs, eat them, and die (The golf balls are too hard to digest). If you are woried about to snake hurting or killing the chickens, it's alright, they don't mass with them. I would know.
Eggs can be hatched by a brood hen right in the chicken coop but if you incubate eggs, it is often best to raise the chicks separate until they grow their first full feathers at around 12 to 16 weeks. This gives them a chance of surviving among the flock since they will be subject to some abuse when the older hens establish the pecking order.
A large chicken is called a standard, whereas a small chicken is a bantam.
yes, chickens can always go into the chicken coop even when it's winter and their seven weeks old.
To neutralize the smell of ammonia in a chicken coop, remove the damp and soiled bedding to be replaced with fresh bedding. Baking soda is safe to mix with the bedding or to sprinkle in the coop to freshen.
Chickens can safely eat fresh bay leaves. You can toss some into the chicken coop with them to see if the chickens want to eat them. It is not a good idea to put them with the chicken's food.
coop is from 10-12 so if your 10-12 call here 619
Yes. The tomato plants are using all that nitrogen from the chicken fertilizer to grow and will be great. Let the plants grow and by all means the tomato's are usable. Pathogens from chicken manure do not enter into plants growing from it. You are safe.
Dennis is Coop's best friend, and sometimes helps Coop battle and fight Kat. Dennis is 11 years old, just like Coop. And he is friendly and really fun to be with.
If you put mothballs just outside the coop the snakes will keep away. If you are worried about to snake eating the hens eggs you can put old golf balls in some of the laying boxes and the snake will mistake them for eggs, eat them, and die (The golf balls are too hard to digest). If you are woried about to snake hurting or killing the chickens, it's alright, they don't mass with them. I would know.
Technically, chickens don't even need hay to lay their eggs. Once they are old enough, around 20 weeks old, they will start laying eggs anywhere they can lay down and nest down in. But it is nice to have a 12 inch by 12 inch box filled with a layer of hay for the chickens to nest in.
"The sly old fox waited until the farmer's back was turned, then dashed into the chicken coop." "The bank robber gave his accomplice a sly grin as they entered the bank, not realizing that the police were waiting for them inside."
Its an old old wooden ship.
An old wooden ship.
Depends on how old the chicken is.